Literature Index

Displaying 1831 - 1840 of 3326
  • Author(s):
    Perkins, D., & Blythe, T.
    Year:
    1994
    Abstract:
    A simple four-part framework gives teachers a language and strategy for enhancing their efforts to teach for greater understanding.
  • Author(s):
    Tempelaar, D. T., Gijselaers, W. H. & van der Loeff, S. S.
    Editors:
    Stephenson, W. R.
    Year:
    2006
    Abstract:
    The Statistical Reasoning Assessment or SRA is one of the first objective instruments developed to assess students? statistical reasoning. Published in 1998 (Garfield, 1998a), it became widely available after the Garfield (2003) publication. Empirical studies applying the SRA by Garfield and co-authors brought forward two intriguing puzzles: the ?gender puzzle?, and the puzzle of ?non-existing relations with course performances?. Moreover, those studies find a, much less puzzling, country-effect. The present study aims to address those three empirical findings. Findings in this study suggest that both puzzles may be at least partly understood in terms of differences in effort students invest in studying: students with strong effort-based learning approaches tend to have lower correct reasoning scores, and higher misconception scores, than students with different learning approaches. In distinction with earlier studies, we administered the SRA at the start of our course. Therefore measured reasoning abilities, correct as well as incorrect, are to be interpreted unequivocally as preconceptions independent of any instruction in our course. Implications of the empirical findings for statistics education are discussed.
  • Author(s):
    Jennifer Noll and Sashi Sharma
    Year:
    2014
    Abstract:
    The “law of large numbers” indicates that as sample size increases, sample statistics become less variable and more closely estimate their corresponding population parameters. Different research studies investigating how people consider sample size when evaluating the reliability of a sample statistic have found a wide range of responses, from no consideration of sample size to over consideration of sample size. This paper provides a qualitative meta-analysis of studies that have used what we dub the “Hospital Task” for investigating peoples’ thinking about the role of sample size in parameter estimation. This paper aims to investigate what the Hospital Task can tell us about how people make decisions under uncertainty and the usefulness of the task for developing models of students’ statistical reasoning. To achieve these goals, we review the original task, synthesize results of other studies which have used some version of this task, provide a critique of the different versions of the task, discuss implications of the task for research, and provide insights and viewpoints from a small group of statisticians. The paper concludes with implications for further research
  • Author(s):
    Iddo Gal & Irena Ograjensek
    Year:
    2010
    Abstract:
    This paper seeks to add to a scholarly dialogue regarding the role and value of qualitative techniques in research on learning and using statistics. The paper briefly outlines some of the core assumptions of qualitative research methods, and presents four examples to illustrate selected qualitative methods that are used by educational researchers and service organizations. The discussion emphasizes the need to integrate quantitative and qualitative approaches in research on learners and users of statistics, and suggests that such integration may be needed to study emerging web-based communities of learners and users of statistics.
  • Author(s):
    Pav Kalinowski, Jerry Lai, Fiona Fidler, and Geoff Cumming
    Year:
    2010
    Abstract:
    Our research in statistical cognition uses both qualitative and quantitative methods. A mixed method approach makes our research more comprehensive, and provides us with new directions, unexpected insights, and alternative explanations for previously established concepts. In this paper, we review four statistical cognition studies that used mixed methods and explain the contributions of both the quantitative and qualitative components. The four studies investigated concern statistical reporting practices in medical journals, an intervention aimed at improving psychologists' interpretations of statistical tests, the extent to which interpretations improve when results are presented with confidence intervals (CIs) rather than p-values, and graduate students' misconceptions about CIs. Finally, we discuss the concept of scientific rigour and outline guidelines for maintaining rigour that should apply equally to qualitative and quantitative research.
  • Author(s):
    Burrill, G.
    Editors:
    Vere-Jones, D., Carlyle, S., & Dawkins, B. P.
    Year:
    1991
    Abstract:
    The main focus of the second Quantitative Literacy Project was to provide secondary teachers with a week-long workshop on the quantitative literacy materials and on techniques to use in teaching those materials. The participants modelled the roles of students and the staff the role of the teacher, using techniques that could be transported to a secondary school classroom. One unique aspect of the workshops was the involvement of professionals statisticians contacted through the local ASA chapters who served as speakers, provided on-site visits and were role models for those interested in statistics as a profession. Another key element was to involve participants in planning, designing and carrying out a project with the guidance of one of the statisticians.
  • Author(s):
    Scheaffer, R. L.
    Year:
    2001
    Abstract:
    Who would disagree that college graduates (not to mention high school graduates) should be able to understand and correctly interpret disease or unemployment rates, the comparative costs of two car or apartment rental agreements, and the trends in the composition of the country's population? Yet many of these graduates are mystified by quantitative arguments, a mystification that ranges from minor confusion in some to functional illiteracy in others. As the world of the information age becomes more quantitative, the ability of people to deal with numerical issues of practical consequence is shrinking.
  • Author(s):
    Rivera-Batiz, F. L.
    Year:
    1992
    Abstract:
    This paper examines the effects of quantitative literacy on the likelihood of employment among young adults in the United States. The data set used in the 1985 Young Adult Literacy Assessment Survey. This survey of persons 21 to 25 years old makes available scores achieved by individuals sampled on a test measuring proficiency in the application of arithmetic skills to practical problems encountered every day. We use these scores as one of a set of variables in a probit model explaining the probability of a person being fully employed. It is found that quantitative literacy skills are a major factor raising the likelihood of full-time employment. Furthermore, low quantitative literacy appears to be critical in explaining the lower probability of employment of young Black Americans relative to Whites.
  • Author(s):
    Burrill, G.
    Editors:
    Hawkins, A.
    Year:
    1990
    Abstract:
    This paper discusses the teaching of statistics in the USA.
    Location:
  • Author(s):
    Langford, E.
    Editors:
    Stephenson, W. R.
    Year:
    2006
    Abstract:
    The calculation of the upper and lower quartile values of a data set in an elementary statistics course is done in at least a dozen different ways, depending on the text or computer/calculator package being used (such as SAS, JMP, MINITAB, Excel, and the TI-83 Plus). In this paper, we examine the various methods and offer a suggestion for a new method which is both statistically sound and easy to apply.

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The CAUSE Research Group is supported in part by a member initiative grant from the American Statistical Association’s Section on Statistics and Data Science Education

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